Security News
Supply Chain Attack Detected in Solana's web3.js Library
A supply chain attack has been detected in versions 1.95.6 and 1.95.7 of the popular @solana/web3.js library.
@rmwc/icon
Advanced tools
Material icons use geometric shapes to visually represent core ideas, capabilities, or topics.
Icons are not part of the official material-components-web spec, but they are referenced many times in the documentation. RMWC provides a declarative way to use icons. Note that RMWC does not ship with any icons of its own. Make sure you include an icon set! You can use any one you want, but Google's Material Icons are available through open source. Follow Google's developer guide to get them setup with your app. https://google.github.io/material-design-icons/
There are lots of different strategies for implementing icons on the web, and the Icon component is flexible for most of them. Use ligatures, classNames, inline SVGs, HTML, or URLs to get icons into your app. The default strategy is 'ligature' which works with the material.io font icon set.
The Icon component, (really the icon prop itself) can accept a variety of formats. Anywhere you see a component prop like icon
or trailingIcon
will inherit the same behavior.
<Icon icon="favorite" />
<Icon
icon={
<div
style={{
background: 'green',
width: '24px',
height: '24px',
borderRadius: '100px'
}}
/>
}
/>
<>
{/**
If you have additional options,
you can pass an object of options to the icon prop.
*/}
<Icon icon={{ icon: 'star', strategy: 'ligature' }} />
{/**
Passing additional props is especially helpful when the entire icon
component isn't exposed. In this example we pass the additional
onMouseOver prop directly to the icon
*/}
<Button
label="Hello!"
icon={{
icon: 'add',
onMouseOver: () => console.log('OVER')
}}
/>
</>
The Material spec details multiple sizes for icons. The Icon component doesn't assign a size by default, but these are available to you to force a size. Please note, this will only work if you've included the RMWC icon css file.
<>
{/* 18px */}
<Icon icon={{ icon: 'favorite', size: 'xsmall' }} />
{/* 20px */}
<Icon icon={{ icon: 'favorite', size: 'small' }} />
{/* 24px */}
<Icon icon={{ icon: 'favorite', size: 'medium' }} />
{/* 36px */}
<Icon icon={{ icon: 'favorite', size: 'large' }} />
{/* 48px */}
<Icon icon={{ icon: 'favorite', size: 'xlarge' }} />
</>
This is for icon fonts that support ligatures like material-icons. This is the default strategy if nothing is set and doesn't require any additional setup if you are using material-icons.
<>
<Icon icon="favorite" />
<Icon icon="favorite_outline" />
{/* Example showing how to set the strategy explicitly */}
<Icon icon={{ icon: 'star', strategy: 'ligature' }} />
</>
This is for icons that are accessible via HTTP(S) and will be loaded directly into an img
tag. This can be auto-detected for things that look like urls. The image will be set as a backgroundImage of the icon. Make sure you impor the RMWC icon css file for this to work properly.
<>
{/** Auto detection */}
<Icon icon="images/icons/twitter.png" />
{/** Explicit */}
<Icon
icon={{
icon: 'images/icons/twitter.png',
strategy: 'url'
}}
/>
</>
This will render a child component inside of the icon. This is useful for all sorts of customization and for rendering inline SVGs. The following example shows rendering an SVG, as well as an arbitrary div
.
<>
{/** Auto detection */}
<Icon
icon={
<div
style={{
background: 'green',
width: '24px',
height: '24px',
borderRadius: '100px'
}}
/>
}
/>
{/** Explicit */}
<Icon
icon={{
strategy: 'component',
icon: (
<svg
style={{ width: '24px', height: '24px' }}
viewBox="0 0 24 24"
>
<path
fill="#4285F4"
d="M21.35,11.1H12.18V13.83H18.69C18.36,17.64 15.19,19.27 12.19,19.27C8.36,19.27 5,16.25 5,12C5,7.9 8.2,4.73 12.2,4.73C15.29,4.73 17.1,6.7 17.1,6.7L19,4.72C19,4.72 16.56,2 12.1,2C6.42,2 2.03,6.8 2.03,12C2.03,17.05 6.16,22 12.25,22C17.6,22 21.5,18.33 21.5,12.91C21.5,11.76 21.35,11.1 21.35,11.1V11.1Z"
/>
</svg>
)
}}
/>
</>
Some font icon sets like Ion Icons and Glyph Icons render based on a className that is set. RMWC docs doesn't include extra icon fonts so there is no example to render, but the below code should give you an approximation.
THIS CANNOT BE AUTO DETECTED. You'll have to explicitly set the strategy directly on the Icon or specify it globally via the RMWCProvider.
<>
{/* Ion Icons <i class="icon ion-star"></i> */}
<Icon
icon={{
icon: 'star',
strategy: 'className',
basename: 'icon',
prefix: 'ion-'
}}
/>
{/**
* Set the option globally throug RMWCProvider
* Glyphicons <span class="glyphicons glyphicons-heart"></span>
**/}
<RMWCProvider
icon={{
strategy: 'className',
basename: 'glyphicons',
prefix: 'glyphicons-'
}}
>
<Icon icon="heart" />
</RMWCProvider>
</>
Sometimes, you just need to do your own thing. Maybe you have a legacy project that already has icons and you want to incorporate them with RMWC. If none of the other strategies are what you need, then you can hijack the whole thing and delegate it to your own render function.
<Icon
icon={{
icon: 'favorite',
strategy: 'custom',
render: ({ content }) => <div>Hello + {content}</div>
}}
/>
A more relevant example involves an app that has a custom / existing icon component. There are a litany of reasons why your app might need one, but if you've found this section of the docs you likely know what problem you need to solve.
`
// 1) Your app has an icon component you use
import { MyIconComponent } from '@rmwc/icon';
<MyIconComponent name="search" />
// 2) Now you are using RMWC, lots of components are instances of Icons
// You need to be able to delegate the handling of an icon prop to your own component
import { TextField } from '@rmwc/textField';
import { Chip } from '@rmwc/chip';
<TextField icon="favorite" />
<Chip icon="favorite" />
// 3) Instead, you should set the custom strategy to be your default
// and add your own handling with RMWCProvider
import React from 'react';
import * as ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
import App from './App'; // your main app component
import { RMWCProvider } from '@rmwc/provider';
import { MyIconComponent } from '@rmwc/icon';
const iconRenderHandler = ({ content, className, ...rest }) => {
// content is whatever was passed to the icon prop
// className is the fully processed className taking into account the basename and prefix defaults
// it's important to include this because MDC often has classes like text-field-icon directly
// on the component for alignment
// rest is just any other props
return <MyIconComponent className={className} name={content} {...rest} />
};
ReactDOM.render(
<RMWCProvider icon={{strategy: 'custom', render: iconRenderHandler}}>
<App />
</RMWCProvider>,
document.getElementById('root')
);
// 4) Now anywhere in your app that an Icon instance is used, it will be
// delegated to your handler and render your custom component
import { TextFieldIcon } from '@rmwc/textfield';
<TextFieldIcon icon="search" />
`
An Icon component. Most of these options can be set once globally, read the documentation on Provider for more info.
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
icon | RMWC.IconPropT | The icon to use. This can be a string for a font icon, a url, or whatever the selected strategy needs. |
6.1.4 (2020-09-11)
FAQs
RMWC Icon component
The npm package @rmwc/icon receives a total of 7,668 weekly downloads. As such, @rmwc/icon popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @rmwc/icon demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Security News
A supply chain attack has been detected in versions 1.95.6 and 1.95.7 of the popular @solana/web3.js library.
Research
Security News
A malicious npm package targets Solana developers, rerouting funds in 2% of transactions to a hardcoded address.
Security News
Research
Socket researchers have discovered malicious npm packages targeting crypto developers, stealing credentials and wallet data using spyware delivered through typosquats of popular cryptographic libraries.